Is a gold medal all that matters?

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Photos:The magic of Sochi

Sochi on show – Sports fans have had plenty of exciting action to cheer at Russia's first Winter Olympics.

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Photos:The magic of Sochi

National pride – "It's a great honor to represent my country and there's a great sense of pride when everyone back home sees the Cayman Island flag," says skier Dow Travers, who had the honor of leading his tiny nation's delegation at the opening ceremony.

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Photos:The magic of Sochi

Taking part – "It was the best feeling just to compete even though it didn't work out the way I wanted," says Austria's Anna Gasser, who qualified fastest for the women's snowboard slopestyle final but finished 10th after suffering two falls and a false start.

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Photos:The magic of Sochi

Revitalizing Russian sport – "This will be vital to help popularize the kind of sport I participate in across my country," says Russian speed skater Ekaterina Lobysheva. "We used to be very good in these disciplines but did not always have the places to train or to compete in, but now we do!"

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Photos:The magic of Sochi

Coming together – "This has been such a great opportunity for us," say unpaid volunteer workers Sarana, Ksenya and David. "It's been great to meet so many new people."

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Photos:The magic of Sochi

Olympic partnerships – "Sport crosses boundaries and there are very few truly global opportunities, but the Olympics is absolutely one of those," says Steve Easterbrook, McDonald's global chief brand officer of Sochi 2014 partner McDonald's.

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Photos:The magic of Sochi

Inspiring people – "In Finland women's ice hockey is not that popular at the moment, so this will really help to inspire people to get interested in the sport," says Susanna Tapani, here celebrating with teammate Minnamari Tuominen after scoring a goal against the U.S. in a preliminary round Group A game.

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Story highlights

Amy Bass: "You don't win silver, you lose gold" is the way some Sochi competitors feel

Bass: While some shed tears over getting a bronze, others like Jenny Jones are jublilant

She says Heidi Kloser broke her leg but still walked with her team as an Olympian

Bass: For others, no medal necessary, Olympic spirit is not winning, but just "to take part"

The look on moguls skier Hannah Kearney's face said it all: A bronze medal felt like a loss to the defending Olympic champion. After posting the top score in the qualifying round, it seemed her quest to become the first freestyle skier to win two gold medals was secure. But a mistake on the top of the course in the final round left her with a 21.49, a bronze medal score.

After finally regaining her composure, the 24-year-old American tried to find a bright side: "It's really unfortunate it's at the Olympics, but I'm sure something good will come of it. I'm just not sure what it is yet."

At the Atlanta Olympics in 1996, Nike launched a controversial advertising campaign: "You don't win silver -- you lose gold." The company pulled the ads after many complained that it violated the Olympic spirit.

Amy Bass

Kearney, it seems, would agree, as she later said she was proud to bring the Olympic medal home, albeit one of the wrong color. She is not alone. In 2008, a tepid controversy arose regarding who had "won" the medal count -- the unofficial tallying of medals that rose to prominence during the Cold War. At the Beijing Olympics, the United States figured itself atop the medal count with 45 total, 14 of which were gold; the Chinese -- with 41 total -- put itself on top with 26 golds.

But bronzes are not just happy occasions when they are surprises. Veteran Alpine skier Julia Mancuso arrived in Sochi as the most decorated American woman in Olympic Alpine history, 1 gold and 2 silvers, and added to that haul on her first day of competition a bronze in the Super Combined. Coming off a relatively miserable season, and always a question mark in slalom, Mancuso has been known to save her best for the most high-profile moments, exemplified by her silver in the same event in Vancouver.

Mancuso's seasoned enthusiasm was equaled by the American figure skaters, who captured bronze in the inaugural team competition. With the exception of ice dancers Charlie White and Meryl Davis, predictions for U.S. skaters in Sochi have been gloomy, meaning that any medal -- bronze or otherwise -- was better than none at all.

The opposite could be said for snowboarding legend Shaun White. Some competitors met with vitriol his decision to withdraw from slopestyle to stay healthy and focus on halfpipe. Perhaps critics should give him a break. For White, it isn't about a medal of any color. It's about capturing that unprecedented third gold.

For others, of course, no medal is required: Mere participation at the Olympics is victory enough. The majority of the athletes who march in the Opening Ceremony will not spend time on a podium. We know it, and more important, they know it. For these athletes, the Olympic Creed has real meaning: "The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part."

The day before Opening, during the moguls qualifier in which Kearney did so well, teammate Heidi Kloser broke her leg in a nasty spill. While in the ambulance, she asked her father if she was still an Olympian, to which he replied "Of course you are." The next evening she made it so, getting to Fisht Olympic Stadium in a wheelchair, and then walking, albeit on crutches, with her team during the Parade of Nations.

In Sochi, Kloser had been a serious medal contender, but in the end it wasn't about competing, it was enough just to be there. For Hannah Kearney, at least initially, it wasn't.